Abstract

Marburg virus (MARV) causes disease with high case fatality rates, and there are no approved vaccines or therapies. Licensing of MARV countermeasures will likely require approval via the FDA's Animal Efficacy Rule, which requires well-characterized animal models that recapitulate human disease. This includes selection of the virus used for exposure and ensuring that it retains the properties of the original isolate. The consequences of amplification of MARV for challenge studies are unknown. Here, we serially passaged and characterized MARV through 13 passes from the original isolate. Surprisingly, the viral genome was very stable, except for a single nucleotide change that resulted in an amino acid substitution in the hydrophobic region of the signal peptide of the glycoprotein (GP). The particle/PFU ratio also decreased following passages, suggesting a role for the amino acid in viral infectivity. To determine if amplification introduces a phenotype in an animal model, cynomolgus macaques were exposed to either 100 or 0.01PFU of low- and high-passage-number MARV. All animals succumbed when exposed to 100PFU of either passage 3 or 13 viruses, although animals exposed to the high-passage-number virus survived longer. However, none of the passage 13 MARV-exposed animals succumbed to 0.01-PFU exposure compared to 75% of passage 3-exposed animals. This is consistent with other filovirus studies that show some particles that are unable to yield a plaque in cell culture can cause lethal disease in vivo. These results have important consequences for the design of experiments that investigate MARV pathogenesis and that test the efficacy of MARV countermeasures. IMPORTANCE Marburg virus (MARV) causes disease with a high case fatality rate, and there are no approved vaccines or therapies. Serial amplification of viruses in cell culture often results in accumulation of mutations, but the effect of such cell culture passage on MARV is unclear. Serial passages of MARV resulted in a single mutation in the region encoding the glycoprotein (GP). This is a region where mutations can have important consequences on outbreaks and human disease [S. Mahanty and M. Bray, Lancet Infect Dis 4:487-498, 2004, https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(04)01103-X]. We thus investigated whether this mutation impacted disease by using a cynomolgus macaque model of MARV infection. Monkeys exposed to virus containing the mutation had better clinical outcomes than monkeys exposed to virus without the mutation. We also observed that a remarkably low number of MARV particles was sufficient to cause death. Our results could have a significant impact on how future studies are designed to model MARV disease and test vaccines and therapeutics.

Highlights

  • Marburg virus (MARV) is a negative-sense, single-stranded, nonsegmented RNA virus that belongs to the family Filoviridae

  • Evidence suggests that fruit bats are the natural reservoir for MARV [3,4,5], but filoviruses can replicate in other hosts, including humans, nonhuman primates (NHPs), and pigs [6, 7]

  • One of the more notable changes found after cell culture passage of Ebola virus (EBOV) and Sudan virus (SUDV) occurs at the glycoprotein (GP) RNA editing site [11, 12]

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Summary

RESULTS

Changes to genotype as Marburg virus is passaged in Vero E6 cell culture. To determine if MARV undergoes genotypic changes during cell culture passage, we serially passaged MARV (Angola variant) 11 times in Vero E6 cells at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 0.001 PFU/cell. The low dose (0.01 PFU) did not contain sufficient Vero E6 cell infectious particles to FIG 3 Survival proportions of NHPs exposed to MARV. (This could be related to a longer survival time prior to succumbing to disease.) Within each group, NHPs exposed to 0.01 PFU showed a delay in exhibiting scores and generally had lower scores. Another important parameter in the progression of MARV disease is febrility (Fig. 5B). Besides the aforementioned SNP in GP, nonsynonymous SNPs at the consensus sequence level were only found in viral RNA collected from the serum of two animals Both animals were in the group exposed to 0.01 PFU of P3 virus. The VP35 SNP (nt 3400) appeared during the cell culture passaging experiments but only reached an abundance of 27% (at passage 5) before decreasing again and disappearing

DISCUSSION
36 Ͻ1 Ͻ1 30 75 8 73 NAb
MATERIALS AND METHODS
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